Book contents
- Keynes in Action
- Keynes in Action
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 What Really Happened at Paris? Keynes and Dulles
- 2 What Really Happened at Paris? The War Guilt Clause
- 3 ‘You Are Very Famous, Maynard’
- 4 The Truth About Lloyd George
- 5 Yielding to Ramsey
- 6 Yielding to Realities
- 7 Truths between Friends
- 8 Truths between Friends
- 9 The Road to Bretton Woods
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Biographical Works on Keynes
- Index
9 - The Road to Bretton Woods
Expediency Revisited
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 November 2022
- Keynes in Action
- Keynes in Action
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 What Really Happened at Paris? Keynes and Dulles
- 2 What Really Happened at Paris? The War Guilt Clause
- 3 ‘You Are Very Famous, Maynard’
- 4 The Truth About Lloyd George
- 5 Yielding to Ramsey
- 6 Yielding to Realities
- 7 Truths between Friends
- 8 Truths between Friends
- 9 The Road to Bretton Woods
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Biographical Works on Keynes
- Index
Summary
The centrality of the Bretton Woods international conference (1944) in the reshaping of international economic and financial institutions in the post-war world has always seemed obvious. In this story Keynes has been recognised as a key player, given his central role as a key advisor of the British government (despite his now precarious health). The mythology of Bretton Woods has often focussed on a supposed clash between a ‘Keynes Plan’ that sought to introduce the concept of ‘bancor’ as an international currency, and a ‘White Plan’ that was the brainchild of the leading US economist Harry White. But this way of telling the story misses the fact that ‘bancor’, for all its suggestive implications, was never put to the conference as an option. Instead we see Keynes – sadder and wiser than in Paris perhaps – accommodating all along to an American view that ‘a deal’ had to be struck. It was one that crucially involved Britain in paying for the benefit of Lend-Lease by adopting the mantra of ‘non-discrimination’. So here is a revealing example of the priority for expediency over truth in a real-world situation.
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- Keynes in ActionTruth and Expediency in Public Policy, pp. 198 - 225Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022